Footnotes

A view of the Olympic stadium in Athens.
photograph by Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Footnotes

The wildly successful US team in the Olympic stadium, in 1896.

photograph from Trustees of the Boston Public Library
| March 30, 2013

Greece’s King George I presenting victory laurels to marathon hero Spiridon Louis.

illustration from Bettmann Archives
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A view of the Olympic stadium in Athens.

photograph by Hulton Archive/Getty Images
| March 30, 2013

Members of the American Team for the 1896 Olympics in Athens, the first modern games.

photograph from Trustees of the Boston Public Library
| March 30, 2013

The first Marathon through the eyes of the Globe.

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John McDermott, an Irish-born New Yorker, won the first Boston Marathon, in 1897, with a time of 2:55:10--nearly seven minutes faster than the runner-up.

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BAA runners from the 1890s in their unicorn uniforms.

photograph from New York Athletic Club
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Globe front page marking US Olympian Fred Lorz’s win in 1905.

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Timothy Ford, 18, of Cambridge won in 1906.

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Tom Longboat, an Onandaga Indian from Hamilton, Ontario, won in 1907.

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A smallish group ready to start the 1923 Marathon.

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John C. Miles of Nova Scotia won in 1926 and 1929.

globe file photo
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Only nine Boston Marathon champions have returned to successfully defend their titles, and only one — Clarence DeMar — has done it more than once, in 1922, 1923, and 1924 and again in 1927 (pictured) and 1928.

globe file photo
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DeMar ran the race 32 times in all and was given the nickname “Clarence DeMarathon.” Pictured, DeMar crossing the finish line in 1930.

globe file photo
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Leslie Pawson, who was a Pawtucket, Rhode Island, mill weaver, according to the Boston Athletic Association, scored the first of his three Boston wins in the 1933 race.

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Winner Dave Komonen of Ontario, Canada, prepared for the 1934 race by making his own running shoes, according to the BAA.

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John Kelley winning the Marathon in 1935.

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Globe front page heralding the 1937 win of Walter Young, who, acc0rding to the BAA, was an unemployed snowshoe racer from Quebec.

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Crossing the finish line in the 1939 Marathon.

Globe file photo
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Joe Smith passes Lou Gregory to take the lead just before Cleveland Circle and eventually the win in the 1942 Marathon.

photograph by CARR/BAA
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Gerard Cote won the 1943 marathon despite a strained Achilles’ tendon, according to the BAA. It was his second Boston title.

globe file photo
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Greek marathoner Stylianos Kyriakides hung gallantly onto John Kelley and ran him down in the late stages of the 1946 race with a 2:29:27 winning performance, according to the BAA.

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The winner of the 1947 Marathon was Korean Yun Bok Suh.

Globe file photo
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The Marathon underway in 1949.

globe file photo
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The start of the 56th Boston Marathon, in 1952.

photograph by Associated press
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Runners race through Natick in 1959.

photograph by paul connell/globe file
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Paavo Kotila, 32, of Finland reaches out to break tape with his fingers as he walks across the finish line to win the 64th Marathon, in 1960. Deputy Mayor John P. McMorrow holds aloft the wreath of victory.

Associated press/file
| March 30, 2013

John Kelley runs the Boston Marathon in 1962. Kelley started the race 61 times, finished 58 times, and won it twice--in 1935 and 1945.

Photograph by Paul J. Connell/Globe file
| March 30, 2013

Morio Shigematsu, who lowered the course record to 2:16:33, led an unprecedented finishing contingent that saw the Japanese finish 1-2-3-5-6 in 1965, according to the BAA.

photograph by associated press/file
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An official attempts to stop women runner 261 from competing in the 1967 Marathon. Number 261 was listed on the program as K. Switzer of Syracuse, New York.

United Press international photo/file
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Switzer remained in the race.

photograph by Paul J. connell/globe file
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Wesleyan University student Ambrose Burfoot gave American runners their first victory in 11 years, in 1968, according to the BAA.

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Gene Roberts crosses the finish line in 1970. The BAA officially started a wheelchair division in 1977.

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In 1972, for the first time in the history of the Marathon, women are allowed to enter. From left to right: Nina Kusci, Kathy Miller, Elaine Pedersen, Ginny Collins, Pat Barrett, Frances Morrison, and Sara Mae Berman.

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New Yorker Nina Kuscsik became the first official women’s winner at Boston with a 3:10:26 performance, according to the BAA.

Photograph by Joseph Dennehy/globe file
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Winner Jon Anderson in 1973.

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An aerial view of the 1978 Marathon.

photograph by bill brett
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From left to right, Esa Tarkanen, Frank Shorter, and the winner of the 1978 Marathon, Bill Rogers

photograph by Frank O'Brien/file
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The Boston Marathon in 1991.

photograph by BOB DEAN/globe staff
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In 1979, Bowdoin College student Joan Benoit (Samuelson) led the women’s field with an American women’s record performance of 2:35:15, according to the BAA.

photograph by john blanding/globe staff/file
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The start of the 100th Boston Marathon, in 1996.

photograph by pam BERRY/ GLOBE STAFF file
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Moses Tanui breaks the tape to win the 100th Boston Marathon, in 1996.

photograph by jim davis/globe staff
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An emotional Uta Pippig after winning the womens title for the third time straight, in 1996.

DAVIS, Jim GLOBE STAFF
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Women's wheelchair winner Jean Driscoll crosses in finish line in the 1996 Marathon.